I was looking for any information that would support the idea that friction fire was a traditional/ ancient skill in Britain. I eventually found some wonderful web pages on the tradition of the "needfire" or "need fire" or "force fire", or "tein-eigin"or "tein-eigen" or "teine-eigin".
It appears that in many parts of the world including nothern Europe and Celtic Britain and Ireland there are traditions to do with friction fire. The needfire is a fire lit by friction at four major fire festivals through the year. Before the festivals everyone extinguishes every flame in their home. At the festival a fire is lit by friction of wood on wood. This is used to light a bonfire, and from the ashes/ coals of this everyone takes home fire to restart their own fires.
Another related tradition does a similar process in order to obtain healing from illness.
These tradtions give me a picture of the place of friction fire in our ancient culture - particularly in the earliest settlements. The main method of fire lighting would have been to keep a fire going all the time, and relight it from a neighbour. At times however the community would find there was no one with a lit fire. The community would then gather together to, probably with some difficulty, create a needfire by friction before distributing it back to the homes.
Anyone heard of any past or present traditions like this in their areas?
see:-
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Force-fire
http://www.geocities.com/annafranklin2/midsummerbon.html
http://www.paganachd.com/faq/ritual.html
It appears that in many parts of the world including nothern Europe and Celtic Britain and Ireland there are traditions to do with friction fire. The needfire is a fire lit by friction at four major fire festivals through the year. Before the festivals everyone extinguishes every flame in their home. At the festival a fire is lit by friction of wood on wood. This is used to light a bonfire, and from the ashes/ coals of this everyone takes home fire to restart their own fires.
Another related tradition does a similar process in order to obtain healing from illness.
These tradtions give me a picture of the place of friction fire in our ancient culture - particularly in the earliest settlements. The main method of fire lighting would have been to keep a fire going all the time, and relight it from a neighbour. At times however the community would find there was no one with a lit fire. The community would then gather together to, probably with some difficulty, create a needfire by friction before distributing it back to the homes.
Anyone heard of any past or present traditions like this in their areas?
see:-
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Force-fire
http://www.geocities.com/annafranklin2/midsummerbon.html
http://www.paganachd.com/faq/ritual.html